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  2. National Crime Scene Cleanup Association - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Crime_Scene...

    The National Crime Scene Cleanup Association (also commonly referred to as NCSCA) is an American company, owned by Prestige Worldwide Ind Corp., that provides crime scene cleanup, hoarding cleanup training, trauma cleanup training, unattended death cleanup training, as well as various types of remediation service training, such as mold, tear gas, or methamphetamine laboratories. [1]

  3. Crime scene cleanup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crime_scene_cleanup

    Crime scene cleanup is a term applied to cleanup of blood, bodily fluids, and other potentially infectious materials (OPIM). It is also referred to as biohazard remediation , and forensic cleanup , because crime scenes are only a portion of the situations in which biohazard cleaning is needed.

  4. Crime scene training offers real-world experience for students

    www.aol.com/news/crime-scene-training-offers...

    Sep. 15—North Central Missouri College was the site of a mock crime scene training on Wednesday morning, allowing students to work with regional first responders. Rex Ross, Trenton, Missouri's ...

  5. Bio Recovery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bio_Recovery

    Bio Recovery is an American company that handles crime scene and bio-hazard cleanups. The company assisted in the clean-up of the apartment of Craig Spencer, who worked with Doctors Without Borders, when he contracted Ebola, as well as a bowling alley he visited in New York. [1]

  6. Advanced Bio Treatment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advanced_Bio_Treatment

    The company employs a multitude of cleanup teams specializing in crime scene cleanup. Day-to-day business operations are overseen by a customer service driven team from the company’s corporate office located in Jacksonville, Florida.

  7. Forensic anthropology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forensic_anthropology

    Assisting with crime scene research, investigation, and recovery of evidence and/or skeletal remains is only one aspect. Processing scenes of mass fatality or incidents of terrorism (i.e. homicide, mass graves and war crimes, and other violations of human rights) is a branch of work that forensic archaeologists are involved with as well.

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